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Global History and Geography Pojer The Age of Reason & Enlightenment.

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Presentation on theme: "Global History and Geography Pojer The Age of Reason & Enlightenment."— Presentation transcript:

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2 Global History and Geography Pojer The Age of Reason & Enlightenment

3 The Origins of Enlightenment? ► SCIENTIFIC:  Newton’s system was synonymous with the empirical and the practical.  Scientific laws could be expressed as universal mathematical formulas.  Science allowed alternatives to be imagined in everything from politics to religion.

4 The Origins of Enlightenment ► RELIGIOUS: e physico-theology –  an attempt (inspired by science) to explain God’s Providence by reference to his work in nature & not primarily through his biblical Word. e support of a “rational” religion, free from mysteries, miracles, and superstitions.

5 The Origins of Enlightenment? ► RELIGIOUS:  Deism: The belief in the existence of a God or supreme being, but a denial of revealed religion, basing one’s belief on the light of nature and reason.  De ists saw no point in any particular religion; they recognized only a distant God, uninvolved in the daily life of man.

6 The Origins of Enlightenment? ► RELIGIOUS:  Gradually, highly educated Protestants & Catholics thought more about God’s work as revealed through science, rather than through the Scriptures.  Pantheism: The belief that God and nature are one and the same.

7 William Blake’s Newton, 1795

8 Royal Academy of Sciences, Paris

9 Zoology & Biology A dissection at the Royal Academy, London.

10 Chemistry Labs & Botany Gardens

11 Natural History Collections ► Cocoa plant drawing. ► Sir Hans Sloane (1660-1753). ► Collected from Jamaica.

12 Natural History Collections James Petiver’s Beetles (London apothecary)

13 Private Collections The Origins of Modern Museums.

14 Women & Science The German astronomer Hevelius & his wife examine the heavens.

15 Centers of the Enlightenment

16 Characteristics of The Enlightenment 1. Rationalism  reason is the arbiter of all things. 2. Cosmology  a new concept of man, his existence on earth, & the place of the earth in the universe. 3. Secularism  application of the methods of science to religion & philosophy.

17 Characteristics of the Enlightenment 4. Scientific Method  Mathematical analysis  Experimentation  Inductive reasoning.  Utilitarianism  the greatest good for the greatest number.  Tolerance  No opinion is worth burning your neighbor for.

18 Characteristics of the Enlightenment 7. Optimism & Self-Confidence  The belief that man is intrinsically good.  The belief in social progress.  Freedom  Of thought and expression.  Bring liberty to all men (modern battle against absolutism).  Education of the Masses

19 Characteristics of the Enlightenment 10. Legal Reforms  Justice, kindness, and charity  no torture or indiscriminant incarceration.  Due process of law.  Constitutionalism  Written constitutions  listing citizens, rights.  Cosmopolitanism.

20 The “Enlightened” Individual  Philosophe ► Not really original thinkers as a whole, but were great publicists of the new thinking  CHANGE & PROGRESS! ► They were students of society who analyzed its evils and advanced reforms.

21 The “Great Debate” Reason & Logic Traditions and Superstitions rationalismempiricismtoleranceskepticismDeism nostalgia for the past organized religions irrationalismemotionalism

22 Marquis de Condorcet (1743-1794) ► Progress of the Human Mind, 1794  An expectation of universal happiness.  Every individual guided by reason could enjoy true independence.  He advocated a free and equal education, constitutionalism, and equal rights for women.

23 John Locke (1632-1704) ► Letter on Toleration, 1689 ► Two Treatises of Government, 1690 ► Some Thoughts Concerning Education, 1693 ► The Reasonableness of Christianity, 1695

24 John Locke’s Philosophy (I) ► The individual must become a “rational creature.” ► Virtue can be learned and practiced. ► Human beings possess free will.  they should be prepared for freedom.  obedience should be out of conviction, not out of fear. ► Legislators owe their power to a contract with the people. ► Neither kings nor wealth are divinely ordained.

25 John Locke’s Philosophy (II) ► There are certain natural rights that are endowed by God to all human beings.  life, liberty, property! ► The doctrine of the Divine Right of Kings was nonsense. ► He favored a republic as the best form of government.

26 Immanuel Kant (1724-1804) ► Critique of Pure Reason, 1781 ► “What is Enlightenment?”, 1784 ► Metaphysical Foundations of Natural Science, 1786

27 Kant’s Philosophy ► Dare to Know! ► He introduced the concept of transcendentalism  some things are known by methods other than empirically.  The belief in the existence of a non-rational way to understand things.  The existence of neither time nor space is determined by empirical understanding.  These type of things are a priori  They transcend sensory experience.  They are pure, not empirical [ [concepts like faith, pre-existence, life after death ].

28 Thomas Paine (1737-1809) ► Common Sense, 1776 ► The Rights of Man, 1791

29 The American “Philosophes” John Adams (1745-1826) Ben Franklin (1706-1790) Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826) …...…life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness…………...

30 Voltaire (1712-1778) ► AKA  Francois Marie Arouet. ► Essay on the Customs and Spirit of Nations, 1756 ► Candide, 1759 ► Philosophical Dictionary, 1764

31 Voltaire’s “Wisdom” (I) ► E► E► E► Every man is guilty of all the good he didn’t do. ► G► G► G► God is a comedian playing to an audience too afraid to laugh. ► I► I► I► If God did not exist, it would be necessary to invent him. ► I► I► I► It is dangerous to be right when the government is wrong. ► L► L► L► Love truth and pardon error.

32 Voltaire’s “Wisdom” (II) ► J► J► J► Judge of a man by his questions rather than by his answers. ► M► M► M► Men are equal; it is not birth, but virtue that makes the difference. ► P► P► P► Prejudice is opinion without judgment. ► T► T► T► The way to become boring is to say everything. ► I► I► I► I may not agree with what you have to say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it.

33 David Hume (1711-1776) ► The Natural History of Religion [][[(1755]). ► Belief in God rested on superstition and fear rather than on reason.

34 Edward Gibbon (1737-1794)  He pointed out problems with contemporary England and tried to urge reform. ► The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire (6 volumes), 1787.

35 Baron de Montesquieu (1689-1755) ► Persian Letters, 1721 ► On the Spirit of Laws, 1758

36 Montesquieu’s Philosophy ► Three types of government:  Monarchy.  Republic.  Despotism.  A separation of political powers ensured freedom and liberty.

37 Jean Jacques Rousseau (1712-1778) ► A Discourse on the Sciences and Arts, 1750 ► Emile, 1762. ► The Social Contract, 1762.

38 Rousseau’s Philosophy (I) ► Question  Does progress in the arts and sciences correspond with progress in morality?  As civilizations progress, they move away from morality.  Science & art raised artificial barriers between people and their natural state.  Therefore, the revival of science and the arts had corrupted social morals, not improved them! NO!

39 Rousseau’s Philosophy (II)  Virtue exists in the ”state of nature,” but lost in “society.”  Government must preserve “virtue” and ”liberty.”  Man is born free, yet everywhere he is in chains.  The concept of the ”Noble Savage.”  Liberty, Equality, Fraternity.  Civil liberty  invest ALL rights and liberties into a society.

40 Rousseau’s Philosophy (III) ► In The Social Contract:  The right kind of political order could make people truly moral and free.  Individual moral freedom could be achieved only by learning to subject one’s individual interests to the “General Will.”  Individuals did this by entering into a social contract not with their rulers, but with each other.  This social contract was derived from human nature, not from history, tradition, or the Bible.

41 Rousseau’s Philosophy (IV) ► People would be most free and moral under a republican form of government with direct democracy. ► However, the individual could be “forced to be free” by the terms of the social contract.  He provided no legal protections for individual rights. ► Rousseau’s thinking:  Had a great influence on the French revolutionaries of 1789.  His attacks on private property inspired the communists of the 19 c such as Karl Marx.

42 Popularizing the Enlightenment

43 A Parisian Salon

44 Madame Geoffrin’s Salon

45 The Salonnieres Madame Geoffrin (1699-1777) Mademoiselle Julie de Lespinasse (1732*-1776) Madame Suzanne Necker (1739-1794)

46 Other Female Salons ► Wealthy Jewish women created nine of the fourteen salons in Berlin. ► In Warsaw, Princess Zofia Czartoryska gathered around her the reform leaders of Poland-Lithuania. ► Middle-class women in London used their salons to raise money to publish women’s writings.

47 Female Philosophes ► Emilie du Chatalet, a French noblewoman (1706-1749). ► Wrote extensively about the mathematics and physics of Gottfried Wilhelm von Lebnitz and Isaac Newton. ► Voltaire, her amour, learned much of his science from her.

48 Denis Diderot (1713-1784) ► All things must be examined, debated, investigated without exception and without regard for anyone’s feelings. ► We will speak against senseless laws until they are reformed; and, while we wait, we will abide by them.

49 Diderot’s Encyclopédie

50 The Encyclopédie ► Complete cycle of knowledge…………...… change the general way of thinking. ► 28 volumes. ► Alphabetical, cross-referenced, illustrated. ► First published in 1751. ► 1500 livres a set.

51 Pages from Diderot’s Encyclopedie

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54 Subscriptions to Diderot’s Encyclopedie

55 The “Republic of Letters” –  gathering of elites in the cities. (salons) ► URBAN –  gathering of elites in the cities. (salons)  – cosmopolitan, worldly ► URBANE  – cosmopolitan, worldly  music, art, literature, politics  read newspapers & the latest books. –  proper behavior; manners and mores [ self-governed ] ► POLITENESS –  proper behavior; manners and mores [ self-governed ]

56 Reading and theEnlightenment 80%for men; 60 % women. ► Literacy: 80%for men; 60 % women. ► Books were expensive (one day’s wages). ► Many readers for each book (20 : 1)  novels, plays & other literature.  journals, memoirs, “private lives.”  philosophy, history, theology.  newspapers, political pamphlets.

57 An Increase in Reading

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59 “Must Read” Books of the Time

60 “Enlightene d Despotism”

61 Frederick the Great of Prussia (r. 1740-1786) ► 1712 -– 1786. ► Succeeded father, Frederick William I (the “Soldier King”). ► Saw himself as the ► “First Servant of the State.”

62 Catherine the Great (r. 1762-1796) ► German Princess Sophie Friederike Auguste of Anhalt-Zerbst. ► 1729 -– 1796.

63 1767: Catherine summons the 1767: Catherine summons the Legislative Commission. 1768-1774: Russo-Turkish War. 1771-1775: Pugachev Rebellion is suppressed. 1771-1775: Pugachev Rebellion is suppressed. 1772: First partition of Poland. 1772: First partition of Poland. 1785: Charter of Nobility. 1785: Charter of Nobility. 1793: Second partition of Poland. 1793: Second partition of Poland. 1795: Third partition of Poland. 1795: Third partition of Poland. Reformer? OR Despot?

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65 The Partitions of Poland - 1772 - 1793 - 1795

66 Russian Expansionism: Late 18c

67 Joseph II of Austria (r. 1765-1790) ► 1741 -– 1790. ► His mother was Maria Theresa.

68 Habsburg Family Crest

69 1772: First partition of Poland. 1778-1779: He failed to annex Bavaria to Austrian lands. 1781: Declared the Toleration Patent. 1781: Abolition of serfdom and feudal dues. 1785: He failed to exchange the Austria Netherlands for Bavaria. 1787-1792: Austria joined Russia in the Russo- Turkish War, but little was gained. 1787-1792: Austria joined Russia in the Russo- Turkish War, but little was gained. 1795: Third partition of Poland. 1795: Third partition of Poland. Joseph II, Holy Roman Emperor

70 Joseph II of Austria

71 Legacy of the Enlightenment? 1. The democratic revolutions begun in America in 1776 and continued in Amsterdam, Brussels, and especially in Paris in the late 1780s, put every Western government on the defensive. 2. Reform, democracy, and republicanism had been placed irrevocably on the Western agenda.

72 Legacy of the Enlightenment? 3. New forms of civil society arose –-- clubs, salons, fraternals, private academies, lending libraries, and professional/scientific organizations. 4. 19 c conservatives blamed it for the modern “egalitarian disease” (once reformers began to criticize established institutions, they didn’t know where and when to stop!)

73 Legacy of the Enlightenment? 5. It established a materialistic tradition based on an ethical system derived solely from a naturalistic account of the human condition (the “Religion of Nature”). 6. Theoretically endowed with full civil and legal rights, the individual had come into existence as a political and social force to be reckoned with.


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